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Unlock the Secrets of the Universe - Red Wheel

Unlock the Secrets of the Universe The Equinox, in print from 1909 1919, was a magical journal published by Aleister Crowley and included Crowley's own laws, rituals and rites, reviews, and magical works by other important SE X M AGICK. practitioners. Published as ten volumes, much of the material remains out of print today. Now, for the first time since Israel Regardie's selections Gems from the Equinox (1974) renowned scholar and Deputy Grandmaster General of the Lon Milo DuQuette presents readers with his own selections from this classic publication, The Best of the Equinox. Volume III of the series presents perhaps the most titillating of esoteric subjects, Sex Magick. Once he grasped the fundamentals of sexual magick, Aleister Crowley understood it to be the key that unlocks the Secrets of the Universe . He dedicated the entire second half of his life to exploring its mysteries. This volume presents the bulk of Crowley's written works on the subject and includes The Gnostic Mass, Energized Enthusiasm, Liber A'ash, Liber Chath, and Liber Stellae Rubeae.

Unlock the Secrets of the Universe ... unlocks the secrets of the universe. He dedicated the entire second half of his life to exploring its mysteries. This volume presents the bulk of Crowley’s written works on the subject and includes The ... Liber AL vel Legis, I, 51.

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Transcription of Unlock the Secrets of the Universe - Red Wheel

1 Unlock the Secrets of the Universe The Equinox, in print from 1909 1919, was a magical journal published by Aleister Crowley and included Crowley's own laws, rituals and rites, reviews, and magical works by other important SE X M AGICK. practitioners. Published as ten volumes, much of the material remains out of print today. Now, for the first time since Israel Regardie's selections Gems from the Equinox (1974) renowned scholar and Deputy Grandmaster General of the Lon Milo DuQuette presents readers with his own selections from this classic publication, The Best of the Equinox. Volume III of the series presents perhaps the most titillating of esoteric subjects, Sex Magick. Once he grasped the fundamentals of sexual magick, Aleister Crowley understood it to be the key that unlocks the Secrets of the Universe . He dedicated the entire second half of his life to exploring its mysteries. This volume presents the bulk of Crowley's written works on the subject and includes The Gnostic Mass, Energized Enthusiasm, Liber A'ash, Liber Chath, and Liber Stellae Rubeae.

2 A B O U T T H E AU T H O R S r VOLUME III THE BEST OF THE EQUINOX. Aleister Crowley (1875 1947) poet, mountaineer, secret agent, magus, SE X. CROWLEY. libertine, and prophet was dubbed by the tabloids, The Wickedest Man in the World.. M AGICK. Lon Milo DuQuette is a bestselling author and lecturer whose books on Magick, Tarot, and the Western Mystery Traditions have been translated into ten languages. He lives in Costa Mesa, CA with his beautiful wife Constance. ISBN: 978-1-57863-571-9 $ ALEISTER CROWLEY. 5 1 8 9 5. LON MILO DUQUETTE. 9 781578 635719. This edition first published in 2013 by Weiser Books Red Wheel /Weiser, Llc With offices at: 665 Third Street, Suite 400. San Francisco, CA 94107. Copyright 2013 Red Wheel /Weiser. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from Red Wheel /.

3 Weiser, Llc. Reviewers may quote brief passages. The right of Aleister Crowley to be identified as the author of this work is asserted. Aleister Crowley material copyright 1912 Ordo Templi Orientis. All rights reserved. ISBN: 978-1-57863-571-9. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available upon request. Cover design by Jim Warner Cover photograph Ordo Templi Orientis. Used by permission. Interior by Frame25 Productions Printed in the United States of America EBM. 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1. The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the American National Standard for Information Sciences . Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials (R1997). Introduction For I am divided for love's sake, for the chance of union. This is the creation of the world, that the pain of division is as nothing, and the joy of dissolution all. liber al vel legis , I, 29 & 30.

4 Also, take your fill and will of love as ye will, when, where and with whom ye will! But always unto me. liber al vel legis , I, 51. When you have proved that God is merely a name for the sex instinct, it appears to me not far to the perception that the sex instinct is God. Aleister Crowley The Equinox III: 1. I n June of 1912 a thirty-four-year-old Aleister Crowley received a strange and colorful visitor to his London flat at 124 Victoria Street. The mysterious caller was Herr Theodor Reuss, agent of the Prussian Secret Service, Wagnerian opera singer,1 newspaper correspondent, high degree Freemason, and head of Ordo Templi Orientis, a 1 In 1882 he sang at Bayreuth at the premier of Wagner's Parsifal. vii German magical society with Rosicrucian and Masonic pretentions. Two years earlier Reuss had presented Crowley with honorary membership in the , pre- sumably in hopes it would bolster Crowley's esoteric cre- dentials in a lawsuit that had been filed against him by S.

5 L. MacGregor Mathers, the head of the London-based Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Mathers had sued to prevent Crowley from publish- ing proprietary initiation rituals and teachings of the in his publication, The Equinox. In the suit, Mathers was claiming to be the worldwide head of the Rosicru- cians, an act of spiritual presumption which outraged Reuss and the leaders of a score of other existing Euro- pean Hermetic and Rosicrucian societies. In an attempt to dilute Mathers' credentials in the eyes of the court these organizations lavished a host of honorary degrees and titles upon Crowley so many that he completely lost track of his various memberships, degrees and mys- tic titles. Crowley eventually won the suit and published The Equinox. The purpose of the June, 1912 visit from Reuss, how- ever, was not to discuss the lawsuit or Golden Dawn mat- ters, but to take Crowley to task for publishing the 's supreme secret of sexual magick.

6 Crowley protested that he had done no such thing, and that in fact, he didn't even know the secret and was completely unaware that the had anything to do with sex magick. viii the best of the Equinox, SEX MAGICK. Reuss stepped to Crowley's own bookshelf and plucked out a copy of Liber CCCXXXIII: The Book of Lies2. and opened it to chapter 36, The Star Sapphire, a short ver- sion of the Hexagram Ritual. Crowley did not immediately understand exactly how the contents of this tiny chapter could possibly reveal the supreme secret of sexual magick, so Ruess patiently discussed what he had written vis a vis certain theoretical and aspects of magick. He led the discus- sion in such a way that Crowley experienced an almost instant epiphany. He was stunned. Since childhood he had intuited the importance and the potential power of sex. But here, in the most profound and simple terms, was the key not only to the mythological symbolism of the ancients, of Christianity and Freemasonry, but (theoretically at least) the key to the mysteries of human consciousness and creation itself.

7 Before the afternoon had passed, Ruess had con- ferred upon Crowley (and his lover, Leila Waddell). the highest initiatory degree of the , the IX , and obligated them to the discretionary terms of its commu- nication. This oath of secrecy' is a somewhat paradoxi- cal obligation. Rather than being an oath not to reveal the secret to the world, it is rather more a promise to 2 Aleister Crowley. Liber CCCXXXIII: The Book of Lies Which Is Also Falsely Called Breaks, the Wanderings or Falsifications of the One Thought of Frater Perdurabo, Which Thought Is Itself Untrue. The original publication date was most likely purposefully mislabeled 1913. First published with commentary copyright 1962 Ordo Templi Orientis. (York Beach, ME: Red Wheel /Weiser 1987). introduction ix perpetuate the secret, to assure that it is protected, pre- served, and never profaned, diluted, corrupted or lost. One doesn't learn a true magical secret like one learns a juicy piece of gossip.

8 A true magical secret is a light bulb that goes off over your own head when you finally get . something. In other words, the IX initiate of the is not obligated to conceal the secret but on the contrary, obligated to make sure as many worthy individuals as pos- sible discover the secret by discerning it themselves. Crowley took this obligation very seriously, and his writings on this particular subject (as we will see in this Best of the Equinox volume on Sex Magick) can be very difficult to understand. They are full of strange, some- times disturbing and confusing symbolic language that Crowley believed clearly revealed everything there was to reveal to anyone ready to have everything revealed to them. I must confess, this is not easy. But it is a magical labor well worth the effort, because the reward is noth- ing less than the Holy Grail itself. After bestowing the IX on Crowley and Leila, Ruess also authorized Crowley to create and head a Brit- ish chapter of and directed him to expand and develop the organization's rituals of initiation into work- able and viable magical ceremonies.

9 From that moment until the end of his life in 1947 sex magick would be the focus of Aleister Crowley's magical work. Unfortunately, the term, sex magick, has a somewhat lurid ring to it. It brings to mind visions of costumed orgies and pornographic acts of dramatic depravity. x the best of the Equinox, SEX MAGICK. Crowley's outrageous and eccentric lifestyle and repu- tation did little to assuage public perceptions about the naughtiness of anything he might be involved in. It's true, he enjoyed shocking anyone who was easy to shock. To the disappointment of many would-be magicians, how- ever, sex magick is a demanding physical and meditative yogic discipline of the highest order. The underlying theory of the technique is as challenging to the imagi- nation as the postulates of quantum mechanics. Yet the fundamental key to sex magick is breathtakingly simple, and can be summarized in the single word ecstasy.

10 The divine consciousness we all experience whenever we temporarily obliterate our sense of separateness from Godhead in timeless moments of orgasm. In that eternal instant the self becomes the All and when we are the All .. there is nothing we cannot create. Modern students of Crowley are further challenged by the terminology he was obliged to use in order to camouflage a direct discussion of the subject. Such obfuscation was necessary not only because of Crow- ley's obligations, but also because of serious con- cerns of legality. We must recall that it wasn't so very long ago that one could not legally publish material con- cerning sexual matters. Even medical journals needed to be very careful about how the subject was approached in print. Ironically, discussions of human/blood sacri- fice were not taboo subjects to write about. Crowley was fiendishly delighted to play this game of words with the publishing world and the public.


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